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Welcome to CAThe Google Maps street view car went by there in January, but they don't go up the ramp to the roof. So if you go around the corner you can see the cabinets and pedestals peeking above the wall, and down below at street level is a homeless encampment. A friend in LA says there are homeless camps all over the city, so I guess this is normal.
Which is worse now regarding this, Northern CA or Southern CA? I've heard stories about both.Welcome to CA
SoCal is certainly catching up because I live in NorCal, tent city CA or Walking Dead CA, pickNCAL still worse. There is still a sense of disgust in SCAL.
NCAL has entirely given up
I haven't visited CA in over 10 years and I'm thinking about taking a road trip there. I could focus on NoCal or SoCal, but I also might take the trip between the two on Hwy 1, which I've never done. I'd be using Superchargers, so I'm interested in where they are. I was surprised to see the homeless camp right below this new location. While I'm not that worried about physical safety, if a Supercharger was right next to a homeless camp, I'd be a little worried about someone vandalizing the car, especially if they came to beg for money and I refused. This location is different, because as a friend said after I showed him the image, "The elite hovers somewhere above the wretched homeless." Most probably they won't come up on the roof to beg, but who knows? I don't know if Tesla has guards at any Supercharger location, at least in the US. They might have to in some countries I've been to, where there are guards at shopping centers - in the parking lots and all over. Unless you have no choice, a prudent person would NOT pick a Supercharger next to a homeless camp if there was another one nearby with no camp.Let's stick to the Superchargers please.
Good to know. Thanks!I was just at this location - it is entirely safe.
I live in the area, and am very familiar with this location. It is a great and safe location for a Supercharger. The homeless encampment is a long-standing byproduct of the Public Storage across the street from the shopping center, since the Public Storage is happy to rent spaces for them to keep stuff. And since the shopping center is private property, the people living on the streets no better than to loiter there.I haven't visited CA in over 10 years and I'm thinking about taking a road trip there. I could focus on NoCal or SoCal, but I also might take the trip between the two on Hwy 1, which I've never done. I'd be using Superchargers, so I'm interested in where they are. I was surprised to see the homeless camp right below this new location. While I'm not that worried about physical safety, if a Supercharger was right next to a homeless camp, I'd be a little worried about someone vandalizing the car, especially if they came to beg for money and I refused. This location is different, because as a friend said after I showed him the image, "The elite hovers somewhere above the wretched homeless." Most probably they won't come up on the roof to beg, but who knows? I don't know if Tesla has guards at any Supercharger location, at least in the US. They might have to in some countries I've been to, where there are guards at shopping centers - in the parking lots and all over. Unless you have no choice, a prudent person would NOT pick a Supercharger next to a homeless camp if there was another one nearby with no camp.
You might say I'm paranoid, but not long ago in Denver I was approached after dark in a parking lot just as I was about to get back in my car. The lot was not brightly lit, and I suddenly thought, "Am I about to get mugged?" So I yelled at the guy to get away, and when he kept coming I yelled as loud as I could. I embarrassed myself because I've never done that before, but that stopped him and he went away. Was I lucky and was he just a beggar? I don't know, but I'm not going back to that store again. Similarly, I don't think I want to visit this Supercharger.